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August 6, 1836.— October t8, 1898. 



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Commodore Philip Inch. 



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COMMODORE PHILIP INCH, 



MEMORIAL WORDS, 

October 21, 1898, 

BY 

PRESIDENT J. E. RANKIN. 



PSALM cvu : 29, 30. He maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof 
are still. Then are they glad, because they are quiet ; so He bringeth them un- 
to their desired haven. 

The Bible might almost be called a seaman's manual. The 
Master chose most of His disciples from the seaside; from sea- 
surroundings. One of His most majestic and significant miracles 
was wrought upon the waters when he said, "Peace, be still." It 
was to troubled seamen that He said, "It is I, be not afraid." It 
was a seaman who loved Him so much and revered Him so much, 
though he so often grieved Him, who, after another miracle which 
startled His material nature to such a degree, cried out, "Depart 
from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man." It was a seaman who 



2 PHII^IP INCH. 

girt on his fisherman's coat and swam out to meet Him, crying, 
"It is the I^ord." The great Teacher once made a boat His 
movable pulpit, put out to sea in it, and spoke to the people on 
the shore. 

There is nothing sa.much like human life in its tempests, its 
calms, its beauty, its solemnity, its mystery and majesty, as the 
ocean. It might be the best theological school in the world. It 
ought to make thoughtful seafarers, Christians. God is there in 
all His power and godhead. "The sea is His, for He made it." 
"They that go down into the sea in ships, that do business on the 
great waters, these see the works of the I^ord and His wonders in 
the deep." It is often said that apprenticeship in a printing of- 
fice is as good as a liberal education. It might be said of the life 
of a seaman, and especially of a seaman in the United States 
Navy. We have lately seen where the correct decision of great 
questions of international law, as well as magnificent manage- 
ment of great warships may be expected. This is a sample of the 
men of the United States Navy— heroic, tender, chivalrous sea- 
men ; yes, Statesmen. 

It was in such a school that Philip Inch was educated. For 
forty-one years he has followed the sea. What a word is that 
word follow. The sea will have no rival. By slow and sure de- 
grees he has gone up from the place of a boy to the rank of a 
commodore. His work was not the brilliant work of a fighting 
man. He did not leap at once from obscurity to glory. It was 



11 i 



PHILIP INCH. 3 

by patient continuance in well-doing, by being always in his 
place and always meeting the conditions of his situation, that he 
purchased his good degree. Naval service has many departments. 
A Naval Constructor, with a quick and inventive genius, in war- 
time may do what Hobson did in Santiago harbor ; what he is do- 
ing there today. He must understand all the great forces of na- 
ture, indeed, but also how science has applied them. He must 
know hydrostatics and hydraulics ; he must know steam power 
and lightning power. A Naval Engineer, such as was Philip 
Inch, is the guardian of the ship's machinery, its vital forces. It 
is the Naval Engineer that makes sea victories possible. A mod- 
ern warship is a school of applied mechanics, on whose construc- 
tion has been an outlay of millions of dollars, and whose proper 
care in a fleet of ships is like the care of an army. Just as the 
competent engineer on a railroad religiously cares for his loco- 
motive, so must the Chief Engineer of the Navy care for the bones 
and sinews and lungs of these great leviathans of the deep. To 
know one of them thoroughly in its machinery is in itself an 
education. 

An observing man, like Philip Inch, visits foreign lands, studies 
the character of their inhabitants, of their institutions ; is liberal- 
ized, is humanized ; comes to feel the blood-beat of humanity 
keeping time with his own ; comes to see what it means when it is 
said that "God has made of one blood all nations of men for to 
dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times 



4 PHIUP INCH. 

before appointed and the bounds of their habitation, that they 
should seek the Lord, if happily they might feel after Him and 
find Him, though He be not far from any one of us." He appre- 
ciates, therefore, the work of foreign mission aries . He gives them 
a warm, greeting and a benediction. He brings home a kind 
word of them. It was Philip Inch's good fortune to marry the 
daughter of a foreign missionary, and to have in his household 
for many years, the late Mrs. Dibble, the missionary's widowed 
wife. How could he doubt the foreign missionary ? It is scarcely 
too much to say that the mother-in-law, anticipating him there 
only a twelve-month, was one of the first to give him Heaven's 
welcome last Tuesday. 

Philip Inch came into the Christian church like a man ; like the 
man that he was. It was after a sermon by his pastor on the text 
"Many of the Pharisees believed on Him, but did not confess 
Him ; for they loved the praise of men more than the praise of 
God." The subject was "Suppressed Religious Convictions." 
He had been impressed on his last home visit, but he had gone 
back to the sea and had allowed his convictions to be silenced. 
On his return home they were again awakened, and so, virtually 
alone, he came forward, the next Communion, and entered into 
covenant with his Lord. His home life was sweet and beautiful, 
his hospitality generous and free. He was the center of social 
attraction there. He was playful, genial and appreciative with 
his children, whose honors and successes were always his delight. 



PHII.IP INCH. 5 

It was his fond thought that now, having completed his naval 
career, having reached the highest station possible for him, hav- 
ing been put upon the retired list, crowned with deserved honors, 
he might secure for himself and his dearest ones that seclusion 
from public service which he so richly merited. But the ''Well 
Done" of his Master quickly followed that of his country. His 
battle with the great Conqueror was short and severe, but God's 
grace was sufficient for him. Almost before his watchers knew 
it, as though he had seen some signal unseen by them, his barque 
slipped her cable and was out upon the great sea, whose outward 
tide knows no return. 

When I lose Christian friends— and, alas! they go very fast 
now— I often apply to them, or to their manner of departure, some 
passage of the Bible. "So he Ipringeth them unto their desired 
haven." This for Philip Inch. None but a seafaring man, or 
one waiting for his return, can know the meaning of these words 
"their desired haven." 

"How may he know the haven's peace. 
Who never fared the sea ? 
Little recks he, who bides on shore 

What tides and winds may be. 
How the blue day drops down the sky 

And night creeps stealthily. 
Little recks he the joy that comes 

When 'gainst the sunset sky. 
Dark headlands and the grey old town 
In the waiting welcome lie ; 



6 PHIIvIP INCH. 

While harbor-lights a greeting flash, 

And homing sea-birds cry. 
These be for him who far hath fared, 

For him alone they be." 

"So he bringeth them unto their desired haven." There were 
short, chopping seas in the harbor when our brother went in, but 
he rode in triumph over them. It was the haven his soul desired ; 
not that he loved this life less. He knew whose hand was on the 
wheel. He knew the harbor-lights. He knew the city-towers, 
though it was a capitol he had not seen. ^ He went in as a ship 
does, furling sail after sail, until the last one is ruffled no more, 
and she drops to her anchorage in peace. If we knew what he 
knows we should say, "This was the sweetest homecoming of all." 
Henceforth he kindles a signal there for us who have known and 
loved him here ; for by God's grace we have shipped for the same 
port. 

"On Tuesday, October i8, 1898, at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., 

PHII^IP INCH, 

Chief ]Engineer, United States Navy." 
This is the earthly record. And here today, as is fitting, are 
the representatives of the Government and of the Loyal Legion. 
His casket is wrapped in that flag under which he has sailed 
many a sea. That is the earthly side, all beautiful and glorious as 
it should be : * 'Honor to whom honor is due. ' ' This is the heaven- 
ly side : "And they shall see His face, and His name shall be in 



PHILIP INCH. 7 

their foreheads. Aud there shall be no night there, and they 
need no candle, neither light of the sun ; for the Lord God giveth 
them light. And they shall reign forever and ever." 

O ! living, reigning brother, here beside thy dust we greet thee, 
we bid thee farewell. 

HAII. AND FARKWElvI*. 

One signal from a greeting band, 
A fragile barque strikes out from land. 
Earth's task complete, sink thou to rest, 
The peace of God within thy breast. 
The ebb-tide lifts the lone buoy-bell, 
Hail, and farewell. 

A white wing on th' horizon's edge, 

A tiny speck, to sight a pledge. 
Thy passage safe, thy passage short, 
God's angels greet thee at the port. 

The ebb-tide lifts the lone buoy-bell, 
Hail, and farewell. 

The sunset gun! Life's colors down, 
A new star set within Night's crown. 
Thou triumph of God's love and grace, 
With saints and martyrs take thy place. 
The ebb-tide lifts the lone buoy -bell, 
Hail, and farewell. 



Cayford Bros 

Makers 

Syracuse, N Y. 

PAT. JIN. 21. 1908 









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